A recently published study indicates that some patients discharged with COPD receive pharmacologic treatment for tobacco use though it is not linked to smoking cessation.

Anne C. Melzer, MD, from the University of Washington in Seattle, and colleagues examined whether pharmacologic treatment of tobacco use following admission for COPD correlated with smoking cessation. Analysis was conducted in a cohort of 1,334 smokers discharged from hospital with a COPD exacerbation between 2005 and 2012.

The researchers found that 33.7% of the patients were dispensed a smoking medication, with more than half (53.4%) receiving a nicotine patch alone. At six to 12 months, 19.8% of patients reported quitting smoking. The odds of quitting were no greater among patients dispensed any single or combination of smoking cessation medications within 90 days of discharge compared to those not receiving medications.

Compared to nicotine patch alone, among patients treated with medications, varenicline correlated with increased odds of cessation, while the odds were decreased for short-acting nicotine replacement therapy alone.

“Treatment was provided to a minority of subjects and was not associated with cessation, with potential differences observed in effectiveness between medications,” the authors write.

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